How Can China Solve Its Old

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Transcript How Can China Solve Its Old

How Can China Solve Its OldAge Security Problem?
Estelle James (2002)
Aging Population in China
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In 1990, only 9% of population was
over 65
By 2030, this proportion will be up to
22%
By 2030, more than ¼ of world’s old
people will live in China
Old family system breaks down due to
one-two-four (one child, two parents,
four grandparents)
Fact
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The Chinese government now spends
only 2% of GDP on formal systems of
old-age support, but will spend over
10% in 30 years. This budgetary
pressure will interfere with its ability to
spend on other important public goods.
Pension Reform
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The Chinese government is well aware
of the looming social security crisis
and is determined to do something
about it.
Projected reforms:
_ prefunding
_ unifying a fragmented system
Observations from Historical Data
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Social Security is an urban
phenomenon in China
In 2000, one pensioner for three
covered workers
In 2000, covered workers comprised
less than 10% of total population but
50% of urban employees, mostly SOE
and government employees.
Observations: continued
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Pensioners comprised almost ¼ of
population over 60. They are mainly
living in urban areas where they
previously had state sector jobs.
Dependency ratio (pensioners/covered
workers) increased by 50% during the
1990s.
Observations: continued
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The pension spending as a percent of
GDP has trebled over the past decade.
The average pension equals GDP per
capita or ¾ of average SOE wage.
Spending has risen faster than
revenue and a surplus at the beginning
of the 1990s has turned into a deficit
by the end.
During the Cultural Revolution
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The provision of old-age security
became a responsibility of each state
enterprise, financed out of current
revenue.
Workers in the formal sector stayed at
the same enterprise throughout their
working lives.
The enterprise provided housing,
medical care and old-age security to
its workers and pensioners.
Cultural Revolution: continued
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At that time, there were very few
pensioners since China still had a
young population.
Cash pensions equaled wage and both
were extremely low since the country
was poor. The biggest expenses were
covered in kind.
Agricultural workers did not have any
formal old-age security program.
During the Shift to a Market
Economy
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Problem: Unfunded employer-sponsored
pensions became unsustainable.
Reasons:
_ Old industries lacked the resources to
finance expected pensions
_ Older enterprises burdened with large
social security obligations could not
compete with new enterprises with no
pensioners
_An enterprise-based pension system deters
worker mobility
Reasons: continued
_Wages have risen rapidly and
pensions have risen even faster.
_It was difficult for state enterprises to
lay off redundant workers. Early
retirement was often used as an
alternative to firing
_The burden of past liabilities made it
difficult to restructure state enterprises
Municipal Pooling:1980-1995
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Experimentation with municipal pooling
began in 1982
1986’s State Council Document 77
encouraged the pooling of pension
obligations at municipal level, on a
pay-as-you-go basis
Advantages of Pooling
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Shift responsibility from enterprise to a
broader unit
All pension costs would be covered out of
municipal pool of funds
Flourishing young enterprises would help to
subsidize failing older enterprises
Worker mobility within a municipality would
be facilitated
Problems of Pooling
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Some municipalities (particularly those with
declining industries) lacked the resources
needed to pay the pension bill. Such
municipalities had to require high
contribution rates, which put them at a
disadvantage.
Municipalities did not have skills and
capacity to administer the social security, so
enterprises continued to keep most of the
records, determine size of pension and
eligibility for normal and early retirement.
Failure of Pooling
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Municipal pooling existed on the paper but it
was very limited in practice, compliance fell
dramatically, and costs grew much faster
than revenues.
Over past decade, the Chinese government
has become increasingly aware that
municipal action alone will not suffice and
will not even work.
Failure of Pooling: continued
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The declining share of SOEs in the
economy accelerated the rise in the
dependency rates for the social security
system, which mainly served SOEs, while
workers in newer forms of enterprise were
largely unprotected.
The possibility of social unrest among
pensioners where enterprises and
municipalities were unable to pay the bill
was a further problem.
Keys to the Long-Run Solution
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Structural unification
Prefunding
A shift to Defined Contribution Plans
Gradual Move Toward Keys
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In 1995, with State Council Document
6, China adopted a multi-pillar system.
Document 6 gave municipalities two
choices – one emphasizing the funded
defined contribution pillar and the other
allowing a greater role for the public
defined benefit pillar. However, this led
to further differentiation, multiple plans
and confusion.
New System
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In 1997 with State Council Document 26,
the government defined more narrowly what
the outlines of the system should be.
The new system would consist of two
components:
_ a basic (flat) benefit that equaled 20% of
the average wage in the region for 15 years
of work;
_ a contribution of 11% toward individual
retirement accounts.
New System: continued
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Pensioners would continue getting
their old benefits and new workers
would enter the new system directly
Current workers would get a mixture of
the new and old systems.
In 1998, the Ministry of Labor and
Social Security was established to
oversee this new system.
Basic Benefit
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Basic benefit
_similar to flat public benefit in UK
_ensure minimum living standard
_ in the long-run, it would be financed
on a pay-as-you-go basis by a 13%
contribution from enterprises to a
municipal or provincial pooled fund.
Individual Accounts
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Accounts are supposed to be
prefunded.
The replacement rate that will be
yielded by the accounts depends
heavily on the rate of return.
Implementation Issues
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Up to early 2000s, China was far from
implementing this new system.
Three key problems have emerged
_ growing deficits and inability to cover
transition costs and fund the accounts
_ moral hazard under decentralized
administration
_ inefficient investment of the funds
Nature of Transition Problem
in China
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Transition costs are low in countries
where the implicit pension debt is
small, and China has a relatively small
implicit pension debt. The Chinese
implicit pension debt is small because
only ¼ of its labor force (the urban
state sector) is covered by social
security.
Nature of Transition Problem
in China: continued
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In China some coastal areas (with few
pensioners and many young workers) can
cover their current obligations with a low
contribution rate and are accumulating a
surplus.
Most areas, however, especially the
northeast or inland areas (with declining
industries, old non-functioning state
enterprises, many pensioners, and few
young workers ) are struggling to cover their
bills.
Evidences on helps from MOF
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In 1997 MOF transferred money to
help cover deficits in five municipalities
By 1999 it had transferred more than
US$2 billion to help 21 municipalities
make pension payments.
In 2000, US$4 billion in 25
municipalities
How to Finance the Transition:
Experiences from Other Countries
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Downsizing benefits
_ replacement rate
_indexation method
_retirement age
_ conversion rate of accounts to
annuities
Using Proceeds of SOE assets
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It is logical to link SOE assets and pension
liabilities
It is not clear who own the assetsenterprise, municipality, or central
government?
In 2001 Chinese government decreed that
companies would have to sell off stateowned shares equivalent to 10% of the
proceeds and turn this revenue over to a
newly created central entity, the National
Social Security Fund.
Using Proceeds of SOE assets:
continued
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The National Social Security Fund would transfer the
funds to areas where they are most needed to pay
pensions, unemployment insurance, and other social
security liabilities.
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In the past, state-owned shares could not be sold. The
new rule applied to Chinese companies listing on both
overseas and domestic markets.
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The proceeds from these assets sales were to be
allocated, not necessarily to the municipalities they
originated from, but to the municipalities with the highest
pension debts and least fiscal capacities of their own.